![]() ![]() For now, check out our screenshot gallery, and stay tuned here and the Mailplane blog to stay on top of this unique blend of web and desktop software.While the last Mailplane update earlier this month added some incremental features, this update to version 1.52 adds Leopard compatibility and prepares the app for a public debut. I'm sure it has quite a ways to go yet, and plenty of us TUAW Gmail-slinging bloggers will be keeping an eye on how development evolves. This stuff is power user gold, and something I would be glad to pay for in a Mac OS X Cocoa application like Mailplane.īut I digress - Mailplane is a strong - and still early beta - start to an exciting application. It's functionality like this that draws me to Gmail because these scripts make it more powerful and easier to navigate than any desktop email client I've ever used. I use Gmail in Firefox with some Greasemonkey scripts that add serious keyboard functionality, such as navigating to labels, expanding/collapsing conversations, discarding and marking conversations as read - all from the keyboard. Speaking of keyboard shortcuts, I think this is also an area where Mailplane really needs to branch out in order to capture its target audience. I guess this could be useful for users new to Gmail, but I wager it will be the power users after Mailplane (especially since I assume it will be a commercial app once the beta is finished), in which case they will probably be sticking to all the universal keyboard shortcuts that work no matter where or what they access Gmail from. ![]() For example: starring a message is cmd-*, even though pressing 's' still does the same thing. First, Mailplane implements a number of proprietary keyboard shortcuts to accomplish tasks that Gmail already has in place. At this early stage, however, there are a number of key elements I hope Mailplane's development focuses on. Mailplane doesn't download your email like a traditional client, it just allows you to interact with Gmail in a very powerful new way. With all this good stuff, however, there are of course a few caveats such as being an early private beta and the fact that all your email still lives on Google's servers i.e. Helping users to manage attachments coming into Gmail, Mailplane has a Downloads menu that can quickly take you to the default location for downloading attachments (set in a Preferences window), as well as automatically adding images found in Gmail messages. If you also opt to install the iPhoto plugin, the Email button in Apple's darling iLife app will send your re-sized copies to Mailplane and attach them to a new message as well. Upon opening Mailplane for the first time, it prompts you to set Mailplane as the default email app which allows you to click on just about any email address or 'mailto' link from the web to create a new Gmail message in Mailplane. ![]() Unlike that browser just for Gmail, Mailplane wraps Gmail's web interface in Mac OS X software which allows it to do some really slick stuff. While the melding of these two universes might seem like an impossible hope to some, Mailplane is a new desktop Gmail client in private beta that just may be a light at the end of the tunnel.Ĭontinue reading for the details on just what Mailplane is about, and be sure to check out our screenshot gallery for a taste of how well (so far) Gmail and the desktop are getting along. ![]() the power and integration of a desktop email client like Apple's Mail.app knows what we're talking about. Anyone who has ever gone back and forth on whether to use the convenience and innovation of Gmail on the web vs. The web can often be clunky and limited by the constraints of a browser, while the data in your desktop software takes a swim with your MacBook when you drop it at the beach. The fusion of web services and desktop software is a holy grail of computing bliss that few can claim. ![]()
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